I am reading the Bible through these days, and I can say that I am a little surprised. I think God wants all the people, and that is why we are created. I don't understand why the Bible talks only about Israel, only about its people and its kingdom. In the Exodus, it is said that God killed every first male child of the Egyptians to let the Israel go. How can this happen, of course it can't be true. Why would God hate some of His people and love without conditions the some other people?

Welcome to the site! This next has nothing to do with the quality of your question, it's just standard to help new visitors avoid misunderstanding the site (as I did at first.) As a new visitor, I'd recommend checking out the following two posts, which are meant to help newcomers "learn the ropes": help page and How we are different than other sites?
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David♦Apr 25 '14 at 19:48

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The bible talks about only the people of Israel because the people of Israel wrote it and maintained it and wanted it so.
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khaverimApr 26 '14 at 7:16

The rest of the Bible is the record of God reaching out to draw mankind back into a relationship with Himself and to pay the appropriate penalty that mankind incurred.

Israel was just one part of God's plan to draw all mankind back to Himself. Israel played a vital role from about 2000 B.C. to about 33 A.D.. Although it only plays significantly for 2,000 years, it does comprise the vast majority of the Bible.

Still, God's choosing of the Jewish people was specifically to be a blessing to the entire world:

And I will make you a great nation,
And I will bless you,
And make your name great;
And so you shall be a blessing;
3 And I will bless those who bless you,
And the one who curses you I will [d]curse.
And in you all the families of the earth will be blessed.” Genesis 12:2-3 NASB

In the Jewish Temple itself, there was the Court of the Gentiles specifically designed for non-Jews to come and worship God.

Yet, God does not love Israel without condition. Time and time again, God judged Israel for their own rebellion against Him. Psalm 78 shows Israel's cycle of rebellion against God and God's judgment of them, and there are many instances of this.

In Numbers 21, God delivered a great victory for them, and shortly thereafter they began grumbling against God, doubting His promise and love and provision. As a result, God brought judgment upon them.

Egypt

The Egyptians worshiped false gods of their own making who were no gods at all and actually worshiped the pharaohs themselves as gods. Worshiping false gods often degrades into horrific practices like the offering of babies as sacrifices. God desired to show the Egyptians that they were worshiping false gods, and He desired to draw them back into a relationship with Him. He did this by great signs and wonders, including 10 plagues. These 10 plagues were basically a showdown between God and the gods of the Egyptians--the god of the Nile, the god of the harvest, the god of the sky, etc., and finally the god of the line of the pharaohs. God won the showdown, and it is important to note that the whole purpose was for the Egyptians to know who God really is.

The Egyptians shall know that I am the Lord, when I stretch out My hand on Egypt and bring out the sons of Israel from their midst. Exodus 7:5 NASB

It is true, in fact, that God did kill every firstborn of Egypt, but this was not without warning. God righteously judged Egypt for their rebellion against Him, but He also provided a way to escape His judgment through the offering of the Passover Lamb. This provision was open to anyone.

God always does this. In the days before the flood, Noah proclaimed that judgment was coming, but only his own family responded and entered God's provision for escape from judgment.

So, God does not hate people. God loves all people and desires that all would return to Him. The fact that God judges does not mean that He has to hate. He upholds His own justice, but He does not hate.

The Lord is not slow about His promise, as some count slowness, but is patient toward you, not wishing for any to perish but for all to come to repentance. 2 Peter 3:9 NASB

God's Judgment and Mercy

So, God will always bring judgment, but He always offers a pardon to those who will accept it. The penalty for rebellion against God's authority, which is really high treason, is to be separated from God. God also has the right to take the life He has given when it is used in rebellion against Him. However, His desire is always that people would respond to His offer of mercy.

God the Son entered into the world, being named Jesus, and took upon Himself the penalty which we ourselves deserved for our rebellion against God. Because of this, He can righteously say that our penalty is paid and justice has been served. This is the whole essence of Christianity. Our penalty and debt is paid by another, if we will only accept that in faith. If we attempt to pay off our own debt or reject His offer, then we will indeed pay the penalty for our own rebellion.

Still, many absolutely reject this offer and do not want to live in relationship with Him. Someone put it this way... either we say to God, "Your will be done" and accept His offer of mercy, or God will say to us, "Your will be done" and give us our choice to live apart from Him.

For Christ also died for sins once for all, the just for the unjust, so that He might bring us to God, having been put to death in the flesh, but made alive in the spirit. 1 Peter 3:18 NASB

He who believes in the Son has eternal life; but he who does not obey the Son will not see life, but the wrath of God abides on him. John 3:36 NASB

All Nations

God does, indeed, love all nations. The baton was passed, in a sense, from the Jewish people to the Gentiles in the early days of the church. To be sure, the first Christian missionaries were all Jewish, and there have always been Jewish believers whom God has used in mighty ways to take the message of salvation and forgiveness to all people.

The concept of all nations comes first in the first chapter of the book of Genesis:

"God blessed them; and God said to them, “Be fruitful and multiply, and fill the earth..." Genesis 1:28a

This gets carried along with Noah:

“As for you, be fruitful and multiply; Populate the earthabundantly and multiply in it.” Genesis 9:7

We see it in Abraham's call as noted above. It is in the Psalms as well:

All the ends of the earth will remember and turn to the Lord, And all the families of the nations will worship before You. Psalm 22:7 NASB

It is in prophecies of the Messiah:

He says, “It is too small a thing that You should be My Servant
To raise up the tribes of Jacob and to restore the preserved ones of Israel;
I will also make You a light of the nations
So that My salvation may reach to the end of the earth.” Isaiah 49:6 NASB

It is in the Great Commission:

"Go therefore and make disciples of all the nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and the Son and the Holy Spirit" Matthew 28:19 NASB

"but you will receive power when the Holy Spirit has come upon you; and you shall be My witnesses both in Jerusalem, and in all Judea and Samaria, and even to the remotest part of the earth.” Acts 1:8 NASB

Finally, the prophecy is fulfilled in Revelation:

After these things I looked, and behold, a great multitude which no one could count, from every nation and all tribes and peoples and tongues, standing before the throne and before the Lamb, clothed in white robes, and palm branches were in their hands; 10 and they cry out with a loud voice, saying, “Salvation to our God who sits on the throne, and to the Lamb.” Revelation 7:-10 NASB

CONCLUSION

So, God loves all people and desires that all would accept His provision for the payment of their sin. He does not love some people without condition and hate others for no reason. In fact, He offers all people forgiveness of their sin, but He does not force anyone to love Him against their will. He does righteously judge those who rebel against Him, but always provides a way of escape.

Thank you for your detailed answer but I did not ask about God. I know and believe in God with all my heart. I asked explicitly about Israel because I find it hard to believe that God had a plan for the kingdom of Israel and their nations and not for anyone else. Even in the kingdom of Israel there was war and evil thinks so I can't see why these things should be fine for Israelites but not for Egyptians. Do you really believe that God could kill children ??
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Albano VitoApr 26 '14 at 21:31

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Yes, God brought the flood in Noah's day that killed children and adults. In the Exodus, those that rejected God's way of salvation from the coming judgment did suffer that judgment.
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NarnianApr 28 '14 at 14:21

Ok but there was no choice for the Egyptians children, it was not their choice. Only the Pharaoh and some of the Egypt leaders knew this. There is no verse in bible that explains that Moses notified the other people except the Israel people. This point is not clear to me.
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Albano VitoApr 28 '14 at 14:30

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@AlbanoVito It seems you may be suggesting that God was unjust in this. That is a whole other question. However, God is very emphatic that He is very merciful and loving and gracious. Judgment is a last resort. He is also omniscient, so He knows the choices that even children yet unborn will make. If this is, in fact, true, then God is not unjust. However, to charge that God is unjust is to assume a moral law, and to assume a moral law is to assume a moral lawgiver. Thus, we are still left with God, if in our limited understanding, we may not comprehend His justice.
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NarnianApr 28 '14 at 16:37

Absolutely this is not what I am suggesting.I am really sorry that you are making a walk around here. Actually I didn't think nothing at all when I asked this question. However reading and re-reading the old testament, I am thinking that maybe some people just slightly changed the meaning of some words from the original one. For example about "killing children" I think that the original meaning should have been something like "punishing" or something like that. First comment here says: "the people of Israel wrote it and maintained it and wanted it so" ... maybe it is right.
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Albano VitoApr 29 '14 at 6:49

I'll focus on the first question which relates to the identity of Israel. The Bible focuses on Israel, because Israel is the Church. The Bible is about God's creation of the world and His promise of redeeming His fallen creation through the Christ. In Genesis 3:15, after Adam and Eve sinned and brought death and evil into the world, God promises a Savior, the "seed of the woman." Then, God gathered together a people around this promise; this is the Church, God's people gathered by Him around the promise of the coming Christ.

The Church therefore began with Adam and Eve, continued through their son Seth, and then down the line to Noah. After the flood, it continued onward to Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob. Jacob was renamed Israel, and his descendants are the Old Testament Israel, the people of God. Yet, not everyone descended from Jacob is part of Israel. Paul makes this point in Romans 9:6-8:

"For not all who are descended from Israel belong to Israel, and not all are children of Abraham because they are his offspring, but 'Through Isaac shall your offspring be named.' This means that it is not the children of the flesh who are the children of God, but the children of the promise are counted as offspring."

The point is that it is not physical descent which makes a person a part of Israel, it is faith in God's promise of salvation through the Christ. The book of Hebrews picks up this point extensively (cf. Hebrews 11:1ff). In addition, people such as Rahab the prostitute of Jericho was incorporated into Israel, the Church, through faith in the Lord (Joshua 2:8-13). Ruth, the Moabite, was also incorporated into the Church through faith (Ruth 1:16-17).

So, it is faith in the Lord's promise of the Christ which makes a person part of Israel, the Church (cf. Galatians 6:16; Ephesians 2:11-22).

That's why the Bible talks about the people of Israel; the Bible is God's revelation to us of His actions in creating and then saving the whole world through Jesus Christ. God made this promise of salvation to all people, and this promise is believed in by the Church. So, in the Old Testament the Church is eventually called "Israel," but it is not just the physical descendants of Jacob who are "Israel;" indeed, not all of them are truly part of "Israel" as is seen, for example, in the days of Elijah the prophet (cf. 1 Kings 18:22ff).

The purpose of Israel, though, is not to horde God's blessings. Rather, Israel is meant to be a witness to God's promise of salvation through the Christ. God set Israel apart in the Old Testament to be this witness in order to call the Gentiles (i.e. the "nations") into the Church. Likewise, in the New Testament the Church is the New Testament Israel which continues this witness, this time in the light of the Christ who has died and risen and is returning to complete the restoration of all creation.

So, God loves all people and wants all people to be saved (1 Timothy 2:4). The purpose of the Church is to proclaim the Gospel of Jesus Christ to all people so that they may come to faith and thereby be incorporated into Israel for their salvation.

If your words 'the Church', that does not exist as the concept of a separate religion in the Bible, is taken to mean, conversion to Judaism through the teaching of Jesus Christ, I would be happy to accept your answer. If not it makes no sense. God is adamant, there is His chosen people (the Israelites, now called the Jews) and there is the rest of the world.
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gideon marxApr 26 '14 at 8:10

By "Church" I mean those who have faith in God's promise of the Christ. In the Old Testament, the Church was eventually called Israel, but it began with Adam and Eve and their son Seth. They looked forward to the coming of the Christ. The New Testament Church is also Israel, living in the light of the incarnation, death, and resurrection of Christ. So, the Church of all times and places is united in Christ. There are two groups of people in the Bible: the Church (Israel) and the nations (the Gentiles).
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Rev. Aaron SimmsApr 26 '14 at 21:03

Thank you reverend for your answer but I am absolutely sure about God loving all people. My concern is about some details in Bible and one of those is what I asked here. I refuse to believe that God could ever kill a man furthermore a child.
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Albano VitoApr 26 '14 at 21:41

Short answer: The bible focuses on Israel because it was the mechanism that God chose to use to bring Jesus into the world in his bodily form and thus bring about atonement for every people group. The calling of Abram / Abraham that is the start of the line leading to Christ is placed right after the story of the tower of Babel (with a list of descendants in between) because it is the start of His ultimate answer which culminates on the day of Pentecost. Genesis 11 - God disperses the peoples, and in Acts 2 he calls them back together provisionally in the unity of the Church. In between these two events the main focus is on the family line that will result in Jesus being born on the earth.

There are as previously indicated much deeper reasons and metaphors built into the concept of Israel but the above is the first superficial layer.

I have read your question the answers and the comments over and thought I might answer the original question with my observations.

Why does the Old Testament talk mainly about the Nation of Israel?

If we take the Old testament by itself we do not see the purpose of those revelations. But on the other hand, when we take the Old Testament in relationship to the New Testament; what we find is that the Old Testament becomes a preamble to the New Testament. So what then, the you, ask is a preamble?

According to Merriam Webster the definition of a preamble is:

PRE'AMBLE, n. [L. proe, before, and ambulo, to go.]

Something previous; introduction to a discourse or writing.

The introductory part of a statute, which states the reasons and intent of the law.

PRE'AMBLE, v.t. To preface; to introduce with previous remarks.

In the case of the Old Testament in relation to the New Testament, both of these apply.

The Old Testament is an introduction in which it give us the reasons that mankind needs a savior to begin with. Secondly It gives us an outline of God's overall plan to reclaim his creation up to the point of sending a savior.

If we contemplate the Old Testament in its entirety. What we find is that God tells us exactly why mankind fell out of his grace in the beginning, and then it goes into giving us a path whereby God assigns righteousness for the faith of the individual. The Old Testament is a compilation of God's grace, followed by man's rebellion, followed by God's grace, followed by man's rebellion. In the Old Testament God is giving us his plan whereby he makes covenants as he goes. All of which are dependent on Israel's unwavering devotion and worship of God.

The New Testament then can be thought of as the completion of the Old Testament. In that it gives God's ultimate solution and forgiveness.

The old testament is the groundwork for God's sending a savior into the world, the reason it talks about the nation of Israel is because that was his chosen nation; and by that what we mean is that it is the nation through which God made his salvation enter into his creation. Additionally, the old testament teaches us that even though our disobedience separates us from God, he loves us enough to save us, in spite of it.

The Bible as a whole then is God's plan of Salvation with the Old Testament being the why, and the New Testament being the how.

Thank you for your answer. It is a very good explanation but it stills doesn't answer the fact that there says that God killed innocent children for the sake of the Israelites. Do you think that the ancient Israelites might have exaggerated a little, or maybe it is our fault (today people) that have translated something not perfectly from the original Word?
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Albano VitoMay 10 '14 at 14:02

@Albano Vito As I read your question that was not a part you asked about, in your question you only said that it surely could not be true. It also took me some time to understand that and if you will ask it as a separate question I will gladly go through how the Scriptures gave me peace concerning that, however it is far too long to post in a comment and does not fit the proper use of comments.
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BYEMay 10 '14 at 14:20